Selective ultraviolet photolysis using an unfiltered mercury arc lamp has been used to substantially reduce the phosgene impurity in a mixture of boron trichloride and phosgene. Infrared spectrophotometric analysis of the sample before and after irradiation shows that is is possible to highly purify commercially available boron trichloride with this method.

Patent
   4405423
Priority
Sep 03 1981
Filed
Sep 03 1981
Issued
Sep 20 1983
Expiry
Sep 03 2001
Assg.orig
Entity
Large
3
2
EXPIRED
1. A method for the photolytic removal of phosgene impurity from samples of boron trichloride, comprising the steps of:
(a) irradiating a boron trichloride sample with ultraviolet radiation of sufficient intensity to photolyze the phosgene impurity therein; and
(b) removing the photolysis products from the boron trichloride.
6. A method for the photolytic removal of phosgene impurity from samples of boron trichloride, comprising the steps of:
(a) dissolving boron trichloride in an inert, transparent cryogenic solvent forming a solution;
(b) irradiating said solution with ultraviolet radiation of sufficient intensity to photolyze the phosgene impurity therein; and
(c) removing the photolysis products from said solution.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein said ultraviolet radiation is in the spectral range of about 215 to 275 nm.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein said ultraviolet radiation is broad-band radiation.
4. The method as described in claim 3, wherein said irradiating step is achieved with minimal destruction of the boron trichloride.
5. The method as described in claim 4, wherein the impure boron trichloride is first liquefied before said irradiating step.
7. The method of claim 6 wherein said ultraviolet radiation is in the spectral range of about 215 to 275 nm.
8. The method of claim 7 wherein said ultraviolet radiation is broad-band radiation.
9. The method as described in claim 8, wherein said inert, transparent cryogenic solvent is selected from the group consisting of krypton and xenon.

This invention is the result of a contract with the Department of Energy (Contract No. W-7405-ENG-36).

The present invention relates generally to purification and more particularly to the photolytic removal of phosgene impurity from boron trichloride using ultraviolet radiation.

Boron trichloride (BCl3) is used in the electronics industry, as an additive for high energy fuels, and as a catalyst, among other uses. The commercially available compound contains in excess of 0.8% of phosgene (COCl2) impurity. Efficient and economical BCl3 purification methods have not been reported to date. Industrial purification procedures generally exploit small differences in macroscopic physical properties between the substance of interest and the contaminants present. For example, fractional distillation, which relies on the difference in vapor pressures of the compounds to be separated at a given temperature, would be an obvious choice were it not for the unfortunately close vapor pressure curves of BCl3 and COCl2. This means that the two components would distill at approximately the same rate.

The method of the instant invention utilizes differences in the microscopic molecular properties between COCl2 and BCl3 to achieve high separation selectivity. That is, the enormous difference in ultraviolet absorption cross sections for COCl2 and BCl3 allows the phosgene to selectively absorb radiation from a mercury arc lamp, causing its photodecomposition, while the boron trichloride remains essentially untouched because it does not significantly absorb such radiation.

Two U.S. patents describe photolytic purification processes which are relevant to the instant invention:

1. In the U.S. Pat. No. 4,063,896, dated Dec. 20, 1977 to Merritt and Robertson, the inventors teach photolytic destruction of phosgene by what is essentially a laser pyrolysis. Particular wavelengths of carbon dioxide laser emission in the 10 μm region of the infrared are absorbed by BCl3 which then transfers some of its vibrational excitation to the phosgene impurity, which does not absorb such wavelengths, by means of molecular collisions. The enormous temperature increase in the laser radiation path causes the phosgene to preferentially decompose since it is more thermally unstable than the BCl3. Such temperature increases, it might be argued, could be more reasonably obtained by heating the gas container. However, in the presence of hot walls it is likely that the BCl3 destruction would increase dramatically. That is, the cold walls and heated gas appear to allow significant phosgene decomposition with minimal BCl3 loss. The advantage and distinguishing feature of the method of the instant invention is that no laser source is required. A simple arc lamp with some output below 275 nm is sufficient. This feature renders our method much less expensive with regard to capital expenditure and operation and maintenance costs. Further, in our method, only the impurity molecules absorb radiation and consequently decompose with little energy wasted in heating the entire sample under irradiation. Therefore, the cost per impurity molecule removed is reduced. This is not to say, however, that an ultraviolet laser could not be used in place of the uv lamp.

2. In U.S. Pat. No. 4,146,449, dated Mar. 27, 1979 to Clark and Anderson, phosphine, arsine and diborane are photochemically removed from silane. Silane containing these impurities is irradiated by means of an ArF laser. A laser is necessary for their purification procedure since it is the only powerful light source available in the wavelength region of interest. That is, it is necessary to perform such photochemical separations at wavelengths where the difference between the absorption constants of the silane and the impurities is significant, which turns out to be around 193 nm, a wavelength where convenient and intense non-laser sources are not available. In our method, the relevant absorptions of BCl3 and COCl2 are well-separated, and the COCl2 absorbs wavelengths emitted from commonly available mercury arc lamps, while the BCl3 does not.

An object of the instant invention is to reduce the concentration of phosgene impurity in boron trichloride.

Additional objects, advantages and novel features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows, and in part will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and attained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.

To achieve the foregoing and other objects and in accordance with the purpose of the present invention, as embodied and broadly described herein, the method of this invention may comprise (a) irradiation of impure boron trichloride with ultraviolet radiation at wavelengths longer than about 215 nm and of sufficient intensity to photolyze the phosgene impurity, and (b) removing the photolysis products from the resulting mixture.

Preferably a broad-band ultraviolet radiation source rich in wavelengths shorter than about 275 nm such as a mercury arc lamp is used, with appropriate high-pass filters, if wavelengths which might photolyze the BCl3 (λ<215 nm) are present. In a further aspect of the present invention, in accordnce with its objects and purposes, the method hereof may also comprise dissolving the impure BCl3 in inert, transparent cryogenic solvents or actually liquefying the BCl3 itself and (a) irradiating the resulting liquid with ultraviolet radiation at wavelengths longer than about 215 nm and of sufficient intensity to photolyze the phosgene impurity, and (b) removing the photolysis products from the resulting solution.

Preferably such inert cryogenic solvents will be krypton or xenon.

The benefits and advantages achieved by the method of the instant invention include the exploitation of the huge difference in molecular absorption coefficients for photolyzing ultraviolet radiation for BCl3 and its principal impurity, phosgene, to achieve high separation selectivity. That is, when impure BCl3 is irradiated with intense ultraviolet radiation at wavelengths between about 215 and 275 nm, the COCl2 is photolyzed while the BCl3 remains essentially unaffected. This is in contrast with bulk distillation, for example which relies on the almost insignificant difference in vapor pressure between the BCl3 and COCl2, a small difference in a bulk physical property, for its execution. The smaller such separation selectivities are, the less efficient and the more costly the purification process will be. The method of the instant invention provides high efficiency and cost effectiveness.

The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form a part of the specification, illustrate an embodiment of the present invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:

FIG. 1 shows the ultraviolet spectrum of 100 torr equivalent of COCl2 in lliquid Xe at -108°C (A) and that of the same solution after 15 min. of photolysis with a 1000 watt mercury arc lamp (B).

FIG. 2 shows the ultraviolet spectrum of 100 torr equivalent of BCl3 in liquid Xe at -108°C

FIG. 3 shows the infrared spectrum of COCl2 impurity found in 1000 torr equivalent of BCl3 in liquid Kr at -153°C; (D) before photolysis, and (E) after 37 min. of photolysis with an unfiltered 1000 watt mercury arc lamp.

FIG. 4 shows the infrared spectrum of 1000 torr equivalent BCl3 in liquid Kr at -153°C The feature corresponds to the collapsed and shifted 2ν3 -band of 10 BCl3. Trace (F) shows the feature immediately after a passivated cell was filled. Curve (G) shows the same situation, but one hour later. Curve (H) was taken after 37 min. of photolysis using an unfiltered 1000 watt mercury arc lamp which removed about 97% of the phosgene.

FIG. 5 shows a plot of the infrared absorbance [ln(Io /I)] of COCl2 impurity in BCl3 in liquid Kr at -153°C as a function of time during photolysis with an unfiltered 1000 watt mercury arc lamp. Curve (I) corresponds to the disappearance of phosgene impurity found in 149 torr equivalent of BCl3, while curve (J) shows the disappearance of the impurity in a 1000 torr equivalent sample of BCl3.

Reference will now be made in detail to the present preferred embodiment of the invention, an example of which is illustrated in the accompanying drawings.

The method of the instant invention utilizes the widely separated photodissociation onset energies of the principal compounds; BCl3 and its chief impurity phosgene (COCl2). FIG. 1 shows the ultraviolet (uv) absorption spectrum of 100 torr equivalent of COCl2 (a torr equivalent is simply that concentration in solution which corresponds to one torr of the solute in the cell before the solution process is commenced) in liquid xenon (lXe) at -108°C (A), and that of the same solution after 15 min. of photolysis with a 1000 watt mercury arm lamp (B). It is known that this absorption band is a predissociated one and that photodissocation will occur at wavelengths shorter than about 275 nm, producing carbon monoxide (CO) and chlorine (Cl2) as the ultimate products according to the reaction:

COCl2hν CO+Cl2 . (1)

These products are stable gases with very different physical properties from BCl3, and may easily be removed from the bulk sample. Carbon monoxide, for example is only slightly soluble in cryogenic solutions with rare gases as solvents so that an immediate separation of the CO product is effectuated. The phosgene peak absorption coefficient for the predissocative A←X transistion is measured to be 1.9×10-19 cm2 at about 230 nm.

FIG. 2, on the other hand, shows the ultraviolet absorption spectrum of 100 torr equivalent of BCl3 in lXe at -108°C, showing that BCl3 absorbs radiation of wavelengths shorter than about 210 nm. This is a known dissociation absorption feature of BCl3 so that irradiation at wavelengths shorter than the absorption onset will result in loss of BCl3 which is undesirable because of both the loss of photons and the loss of the material intended to be purified. Therefore, by restricting the photolyzing wavelengths to between about 275 nm and 215 nm, a maximum utilization of photons can be achieved with a minimum loss of BCl3 utilizing the selective excitation of the COCl2 molecules to a predissociative electronic state to remove this impurity by the reaction described in Eq. 1.

The ultraviolet spectra of neat COCl2 and BCl3 dissolved in lXe at -108°C shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 were taken using a Cary Model 17-D double-beam spectrophotometer. The path length here was typically 1.27 cm, and the inner and outer cell windows on the one-way cells used were sapphire and calcium fluoride, respectively. Typical time constants and scan speeds were 1 s and 0.2 nm/s, respectively.

It is important to mention that the solution-phase uv spectra of both BCl3 and COCl2 are qualitatively similar, although slightly shifted in wavelength to those obtained in the vapor-phase. It is further true that the bands in solution represent the identical vapor-phase bands spectroscopically. That is, the above-mentioned dissociative features are known to be so by analogy from the corresponding, previously carefully investigated vapor-phase spectra. Moreover, the liquid-phase photochemistry is derived by analogy to the well-known vapor-phase results. In particular, Eq. 1 is reasoned from the vapor-phase. Subject to certain unstable intermediates becoming stable in cryogenic solutions and giving rise to other photochemical pathways and small quantities of other final products, the major photochemical pathways appear to follow those observed in vapor-phase photolysis. Therefore, Eq. 1 is most likely the dominant reaction which occurs in solution. For scientific publications which support these conclusions, see e.g., W. B. Maier et al., J. Chem. Phys. 69, 1961 (1978) and S. M. Freund et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 101, 4522 (1979) (Freund I). Conversely, the method of the instant invention will work in a very similar fashion in the vapor-phase. As will be discussed below, the principal reason for choosing the cryogenic solution was to facilitate the analytical procedure of monitoring the phosgene removal. See, e.g., Freund et al., Anal. Chem. 50, 1260 (1978) (Freund II).

Photolysis of cryogenic solutions of commercially available BCl3 in rare gas solvent provides a simple method of accurately observing the decrease of the phosgene impurity as a function of time since equivalent pressures of thousands of torr can usually be easily obtained. Further, because of the collapse of the rotation-vibration structure in such solutions, close lying absorption features of different species can often be accurately resolved. However, it turned out that at concentrations of BCl3 approximately equivalent to a pressure of 1000 torr, ample COCl2 absorption intensity existed to enable infrared spectrophotometric monitoring of its concentration down to approximately 1% of its initial value. The apparatus used for both the spectroscopy and the photochemistry experiments has been described in detail in Maier et al., supra. Photolyses were performed in two-way copper cells. Corning 9-57 uv filter material (4 mm thick) was used to pass uv light, and thallium bromide windows allowed simultaneous monitoring of the disappearance of COCl2 with a Perkin-Elmer Model 180 double beam infrared spectrophotometer. No attempt was made to monitor products.

The COCl2 concentration was monitored through a 2.6 cm pathlength usually at 840 cm-1 (σir =1.49×10-17 cm2), and occasionally at 1817 cm-1 (σir =8.1×10-18 cm2). These wavenumbers correspond to the collapsed and shifted ν5 and ν1 rotation-vibration bands, respectively, in liquid krypton (lKr) at -153°C The quoted σir values are the measured peak absorption cross-sections in the cryogenic solution at the wavelengths quoted. All infrared spectra were taken with a 1.5-2 s time constant at a scan speed of 0.05 cm-1 s-1. Full-width at-half-maximum absorbance of the observed spectral features ranged from 3-5 cm-1. There was no reason for performing the uv spectroscopy in lXe and the photolyses in lXr other than the availability of these gases on the days the experiments were performed.

Matheson Gas Products boron trichloride, C.P. with stated purity of 99.9% min. was cryopumped and warmed several times for purification. Commercial, high purity krypton and xenon were used without further purification.

Solutions were prepared by sweeping measured quantities of gaseous BCl3 into partially filled cells of liquefied solvent with gaseous solvent. Maier et al. and Freund I, supra. Prior to filling, the cell and the gas manifold were passivated for several minutes with about 1000 torr of BCl3 which was then pumped away. The cell was then completely filled by liquefying additional solvent gas while vigorously stirring the solution by means of a Teflon-coated magnetic stirrer.

Initially, a Corning 9-54 filter was inserted between the source, a 1000 watt mercury arc lamp supplied by Oriel Corporation, and the sample to eliminate the uv emission below about 215 nm which would overlap the BCl3 absorption band. This was later found to be unnecessary since the lamp itself was virtually no output below about 230 nm.

It had determined that there was little problem with solubility of the COCl2 in liquid krypton (lKr). In particular, the 0.78% concentration of COCl2 in the commercial BCl3 sample was determined from the measured liquid-phase infrared absorption coefficient, σir. This quantity was the average of a series of such determinations over a range of concentrations. Note that this is eight times the impurity level stated by the manufacturer.

Curve (D) in FIG. 3 shows an infrared scan of the collapsed and shifted (1818 cm-1 solution vs. 1827 cm-1 for the gas) ν1 -band of the phosgene present in 1000 torr equivalent of BCl3 in lKr at -153°C As is shown in Curve (E) of FIG. 3, after about 37 min. of photolysis using the unfiltered arc lamp, about 3% of the original COCl2 remains.

FIG. 4 shows an infrared spectrum of the collapsed and shifted (1972 cm-1 solution vs. 1984 cm-1 for the gas ) 2ν3 band of 10 BCl3. The overtone band of the less abundant boron isotope was used since the fundamentals of either isotopic species were effectively opaque to the infrared radiation used for the analyses. Trace (F) was taken immediately after filling a passivated cell to 1000 torr equivalent of BCl3. Trace (G) was recorded approximately one hour later. Trace (H) was taken after 37 min. of photolysis of the sample using the unfiltered 1000 watt mercury arc light source which removed about 97% of the phosgene as was described in FIG. 3. As can readily be observed, virtually no BCl3 has been destroyed. Note that the photolyzing radiation effects both boron isotopes identically, so that monitoring the 10 B in BCl3 is a fair indication of the total BCl3 consumed.

FIG. 5 shows traces of infrared absorbance [ln(Io /I)] of phosgene impurity vs. time during photolysis for a solution of 150 torr equivalent of BCl3 in lKr at -153°C (Curve (I), and a solution of 1000 torr equivalent of BCl3 in lKr at -153°C (Curve (J). In both photolyses, the 840 cm-1 ν5 feature of COCl2 was monitored and the unfiltered 1000 watt mercury arc lamp was the photolysis source. In the former photolysis, the COCl2 was reduced to about 9% of its original concentration in 25 min., while in the latter (which corresponds to FIGS. 3 and 4), the COCl2 is reduced to about 3% in 37 min. The figure displays two important results. The linearity of the two traces shows that the sample is optically thin, and more importantly that the COCl2 photolysis follows simple first order kinetic analysis. The factor of eight difference in COCl2 concentration for the two photolyses without any significant deviation from a linear relationship as a function of time suggests that radical mechanisms are unimportant. It should be mentioned that the absorbance point for t=0 for curve (J) is a calculated point assuming 0.78% phosgene impurity in the BCl3 as was actually determined from curve (I) and σir. Its departure from the most reasonable line through the other points may reflect that the solution is nearing saturation for COCl2 at this temperature. There is little doubt that the mechanism suggested by Eq. 1 applies in both the gas phase and in cryogenic solution which suggests that the photolysis method can be used to purify BCl3 to very high purity levels.

In summary, then, the method of the instant invention provides a photolytic purification of boron trichloride by selective dissociation of the principle impurity, phosgene, while leaving the boron trichloride to be purified untouched. The instant method is more efficient than physical methods of purification since not all of the material is being subjected to the same process. Further, it is anticipated that the efficiency will be maintained to very high purity levels whereas physical separations become increasingly difficult and inefficient as the purity level increases (i.e., the impurity concentration decreases).

The foregoing description of a preferred embodiment of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.

Freund, Samuel M.

Patent Priority Assignee Title
5833814, Jun 27 1997 BOC GROUP INC , THE Apparatus and method for purifying boron trichloride by removal of phosgene
6238636, Sep 03 1999 Air Liquide America Corporation; L AIR LIQUIDE, SOCIETE ANONYME POUR L ETUDE ET, L EXPLOITATION DES PROCEDES GEORGES, CLAUDE Process and systems for purification of boron trichloride
6361750, Sep 03 1999 Air Liquide America Corporation; American Air Liquide, Inc. Systems for purification of boron trichloride
Patent Priority Assignee Title
4063896, Dec 27 1976 The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Army Removal of phosgene impurity from boron trichloride by laser radiation
4146449, Dec 28 1977 The United States of America as represented by the United States Purification of silane via laser-induced chemistry
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Aug 28 1981FREUND, SAMUEL M UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, AS REPRESENTED BY THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF ENERGYASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST 0039600944 pdf
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